Sarah was born about 1712 in Philadelphia County Pennsylvania. She was the daughter of John Hatfield and his wife Elizabeth.
She married Anthony Conard not long after they announced their second intention to marry on 24 Apr 1733 at the Women's Monthly Meeting of Friends in Gwynedd Township.[1][2][3] They had at least 7 children:
She died sometime after 1762, probably in Loudoun, Virginia.
Note
John Hatfield, who married Catherine Supplee at the First Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia in November of 1739, is the son of another John Hatfield and his wife Elizabeth. The first record for the father John appears in 1717 when "John Hadfield, late of Maidenhead in the County of Hunterdon in the Province of West New Jersey but now of Upper Dublin Township in the County of Philadelphia..." purchased 198 acres of land near Philadelphia. John and Elizabeth had 6 children named Sarah (who married Anthony Kunders), Jane (who married James Conrad), Elizabeth (who married Henry Dismant), Suzannah (who married Joseph Turner), Adam (who married Mary Cleaver), and John (who married Catherine Supplee).
Sources
↑Anthony Conard & Sarah Hatfield Second Intention to Marry, 24 Apr 1733, Gwynedd Township Women's Monthly Meeting. Ancestry on-line database (requires subscription): "U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935". Image 28 of 185 (accessed 17 Feb 2024).
↑ Reynolds, Susan and Barry. Descendant Register. Lake and Reynolds Genealogy (online database: last updated 24 October 2020)note: source for leads; cites Clymer Connection
Marriage: "U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935" Swarthmore College; Swarthmore, Pennsylvania Ancestry Sharing Link - Ancestry Record 2189 #1099443588 (accessed 18 March 2024) Sarah Hatfield marriage to Anthony Cunrad on 27 Mar 1733 in Chester, Pennsylvania.
Hildeburn, Charles R., ed. "Baptisms and Burials From the Records of Christ Church, Philadelphia, 1709-1760. Philadelphia, PA, USA". Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 1877-1893. Note: Collection of church records from the First Episcopal Church in Philadelphia between 1709 and 1760
Is Sarah your ancestor? Please don't go away! Login to collaborate or comment, or
contact
a profile manager, or ask our community of genealogists a question.
Sponsored Search by Ancestry.com
DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Sarah by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known mtDNA test-takers in her direct maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Sarah: